List Price: $99.98You Pay Only: $74.99 You Save: $24.99 (25%)Prices subject to change.
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1
Binding: DVD
Brand: Warner Brothers
EAN: 0794051420220
Format: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD-Video, Widescreen, NTSC
Label: Sci-Fi Channel, The
Manufacturer: Sci-Fi Channel, The
Number Of Items: 6
Publisher: Sci-Fi Channel, The
Region Code: 1
Release Date: November 06, 2007
Running Time: 652 minutes
Sales Rank: 438
Studio: Sci-Fi Channel, The
Theatrical Release Date: 2007
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: The third installment of Doctor Who is full of new thrills new laughs new heartbreak and some terrifying new monsters. From the moment the Doctor walks into the life of medical student Martha Jones he changes it forever. In Elizabethan London they meet William Shakespeare at the Globe Theatre while back in present day London 76-year-old Professor Lazarus recaptures his youth with consequences that threaten Martha's entire family. And the Doctor's sworn enemies the Daleks who have been hiding in 1930's New York return with a terrifying plan for humanity. Genre: TELEVISION/SERIES & SEQUELS UPC: 794051420220 Manufacturer No: E4202
Amazon.com: Doctor Who fans concerned that the departure of popular companion Rose (Billie Piper) at the end of the second season might spell an end to the venerable UK science fiction series' revival were soon reassured by the program's third series, which is compiled in its entirety in this six-disc set. Not only did Freema Agyeman (as Earth doctor Martha Jones) prove to be more than a worthwhile replacement for Rose, but the quality of the series' 14 episodes maintained--and in many cases surpassed--the blend of wit, excitement and drama brought by head writer Russell T. Jones when he revived the program in 2003. Highlights from the third series include the Christmas special 'The Runaway Bride' (starring comedian Catherine Tate as a temporary companion to the Doctor as he mourns the loss of Rose), 'Gridlock' (the Face of Boe summons the Doctor and Martha to a future New York City to stop an invasion by his old enemy the Macra), 'Human Nature' and 'The Family of Blood' (a two-part serial in which the Doctor changes his biological form to escape the clutches of an alien brood who seek his immortality), and the three-part 'Utopia,' 'The Sound of Drums' and 'The Last of the Time Lords,' which not only revives the Doctor's greatest adversary, The Master (played by Derek Jacobi in 'Utopia' and John Simm in 'Drums' and 'Time Lords') but also revives Jack Harkness (John Barrowman) and introduces his new position with the Torchwood team. Supplemental features are included on each of the six discs in the set; chief among them are commentary by Jones, Tennant, Agyeman, producer Phil Collinson, and members of the writing and production team (in various permutations) on each of the 14 episodes. The Doctor Who Confidential series, which aired on BBC Three and offered behind-the-scenes looks at elements from each episode, is included in its 15-minute 'cut down' version (as well as an hour-long episode that covered a live performance of music from the show by the National Orchestra of Wales and hosted by Tennant), as are several video diaries shot by Tennant, who proves as engaging behind the camera as he is on the show. A smattering of deleted scenes, outtakes (mostly featuring Tennant reacting good-naturedly to his own blown lines), BBC promos for all 13 episodes (including the amusing 'Vote Saxon' spot, which offers Sharon Osbourne and UK pop stars McFly throwing their support behind the Master's disguise as a human MP in the series' final two episodes), and trailers for other BBC series like Jekyll, Torchwood, and MI-5, round out this terrific set. -- Paul Gaita
Customer Reviews
Average Rating: 
Rating: - I've had it with this!
Two and a half stars. The disgust factor outweighed the entertainment value, for me, a fan since the 1980's. Why? The manic pacing in a 40 minute story arc has been my main quibble since the Eccleston debut. Oh it's indeed entertaining, for the most part. But my "love/hate" relationship with all the newer "series" tipped to hate and disgust with the last two episodes here; when, it finally dawned on me--that the current producer is no longer paying homage to what came before his tenure (IF he ever did), but is instead trashing the entire program's history! The trail of dead is enormous; he's killed off the Daleks (for the most part), and (his own creation) the "face of Bo", he's killed off the entire planet of Gallifrey, and also, K-9, (looked that way), and lastly the character of the "Master". He changed the Master to a clean shaven, effete Joker...and with that, I bade farewell to watching any more from this production; because now, it's clear that's it's no longer homage, but nose thumbing, self important aggrandizment, ignoring long time Who fandom, in order to over romantisize and elevate the Doc in a sort of ever accruing messianism. Mark my word, if this continues, the program will get harder aqnd harder to write scripts for, and thus cliches will suffice for ideas, because the ready made history will be lost. As old Tom Baker's doctor would say, "how very odd indeed".
Rating: - The Doctor does it again!
I, like so many other folks of my generation, grew up entertained, thrilled, and scared out of my mind by Doctor Who. When the new series began airing in 2005 I was more than a little concerned (in the way one is concerned when remembering that a movie version is never as good as the book it was based off of or how a remake is never as good as the original). But much like Rose, Christopher Eccleston's Doctor had me at "Run". And the fantastic David Tennant does it even better.
Whether he's taking out an army of spider people in "The Runaway Bride" (props to the incredible Catherine Tate) or being dismayed at the lack of math taught in the future in "42" (what the heck is recreational mathematics anyways?) Tennant is absolutely brilliant as the Doctor, the time-travelling Time Lord from Gallifrey.
While the third season (or series as the British say) does feature everything anyone has ever wanted from or expected of the Doctor Who franchise, there are a few pitfalls along the way. Most notably the replacement of Billie Piper by Freema Agyeman as the Doctor's newest companion. While Martha Jones (Agyeman) is suitably plucky and adventurous, fans of the previous two seasons will find her pale in comparison to the truly awesome Rose Tyler (Piper) especially when it comes to the chemistry with Tennant's Doctor, which occasionally falls flat.
But where the show occasionally fails to live up to expectations it also frequently manages to live up to, and even surpass, ... Read More
Rating: - poor Freema
The best episodes of this season are PHENOMENAL. That said, it seemed like the writers didn't know what to do with the gorgeous Freema other than let her whine. Every episode. About how mad she is about the Doctor. And how he doesn't even look at her. Sigh. In fairness to her character, I don't like the way the Doctor was written in this respect either. I know he's hurting because Rose is gone, but hello.......how old are you? Appreciate Martha for the gem she is. The better episodes are the ones in which their relationship is downplayed. (In the exceptionally excellent "Blink" she's hardly there.)
Overall, very very good. The only weakness is the (lack of) relationship between this Doctor and this companion.
Rating: - The third season brings the intensity and the emotional impact
I felt that Season 2 struggled a bit; although David Tennant took to the role and made it his own, in my opinion not enough time was spent on Rose's adjustment to his regeneration. Instead everything was sweetness and light from the get go. There were certainly high points and the finale was heartbreaking enough to make me cry, but Season 3 starts off with that emotional impact and that makes it all the better.
Season 3 is really all about the Doctor, as it should be, and his pain. He struggles constantly with his need for a companion (he is a social animal, after all) and his conflicts about the nature of his relationship with a companion and his reluctance to get hurt as deeply again as he was by the loss of Rose. Yet Martha proves her worth and her devotion to him, over and over, in fact. Her voyage is important but secondary to his.
Rating: - Must Have for Any Doctor Who Fan
After the lose of Rose Tyler I did not think the Doctor could find another worthy companion, but he did in Martha Jones. Excellent new adventures in this third series collection.
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